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We send out a month­ly newslet­ter — It’s free and has great flower arrang­ing ideas and tips includ­ing our upcom­ing flo­ral work­shop list, flo­ral design book reviews, how-tos, and more. We send it out each month and don’t share our mail­ing list with any­one.

Since 2010, we’ve cre­at­ed a hot list of what’s on for flo­ral design in and beyond South­ern Cal­i­for­nia. As guest speak­ers inside and out­side of Cal­i­for­nia, we know what clients need in the wed­ding and event indus­try. We are your trust­ed resource for flo­ral design tips and tech­niques for all lev­els of the flower enthu­si­ast.

We are Kit Wertz and Casey Schwartz, the sis­ter design team of Flower Duet. We are com­mit­ted to edu­cat­ing our stu­dents and fans since we start­ed our flo­ral design busi­ness in 1999.

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Hydrangeas and Ranun­cu­lus blooms make up this sim­ple vase design that is great for a win­ter white flo­ral dis­play. Flow­ers by Flower Duet. Pho­to by Kit Wertz.

Founding Fathers’ Flowers for Independence Day

How to Recreate an American Colonial Flower Design

by Kit Wertz

To help Amer­i­ca cel­e­brate its 235th birth­day, why not make a flower arrange­ment that would be suit­able in our found­ing fathers’ and moth­ers’ homes? The Amer­i­can colonists would have used flow­ers and grass­es from their gar­dens and per­haps from the woods and fields around them.

About Colonial Flower Design

The design was a loose, but sym­met­ri­cal, mass of flow­ers with­out any “struc­ture.” The flower design would be a mix of flow­ers and grass­es or just one type of flower with one type of filler. Flo­ral design was not stud­ied yet — that would come much lat­er. Most colonists were busy just gar­den­ing to grow food to put on the table and would not have both­ered too much with dec­o­ra­tions. Think “home­made” flower design with­out too much thought to place­ment of col­or or tex­ture.

Colonial Vases

They had a lot of Euro­pean influ­ence in their styles of vas­es, but many folks just mixed flow­ers and grass­es from their gar­dens into met­al jugs, pots, glass jars and all kinds of water pitch­ers.
Colonists would have brought a few porce­lain pieces from Europe for flower dis­plays. One type of porce­lain was Delft­ware vas­es and bowls. It’s a very del­i­cate hand- paint­ed blue-on-white porce­lain prod­uct from Delft, Hol­land. Exam­ple pic­tured at left.

Anoth­er pop­u­lar vase of the time was a fan shaped vase that had five slots to place in sin­gle stems of flow­ers. These were called Quin­tal horns and made it easy for the arranger to have a nice one-sided design. Check out this mod­ern repro­duc­tion Quin­tal Horn Vase for sale in the UK.

So, grab a pret­ty ceram­ic water pitch­er or your basic glass jar from the last time you made spaghet­ti. Go out to your gar­den in the ear­ly morn­ing and cut some flow­ers, shrub branch­es and grass­es and make a tra­di­tion­al colo­nial design to cel­e­brate Amer­i­ca being 235 years old!

Fireworks Flowers

Now to mod­ern times and mod­ern flow­ers. If you want to have a flo­ral design the mim­ics the look of fire­works, what flow­ers do you use? Here are a few you can use to make a fun “fire­work” flower dis­play for your July 4th cook­out.

Aga­pan­thus — Comes in white or blue — per­fect for July 4th and is bloom­ing right now in gar­dens all over!

Spi­der Mum — Long petals make this white or green mum a good choice to mim­ic bursts of fire­works.

Spray Car­na­tion- Get some red or white into your design with this fire­crack­er look­ing flower. All the blooms on dif­fer­ent ends mim­ic the bursts of fire­works you see in clus­ters near the finale of every dis­play.

Pin­cush­ion Pro­tea — Comes in orange or yel­low. This is just a fun flower all around!

Lan­tana — This round burst of minia­ture flow­ers looks like a burst of col­or in the air.

Queen Anne’s Lace — This white lacey flower mim­ics a large burst of a round fire­work in the night sky.

Focus on Greenery — Italian Ruscus

by Flower Duet Edi­tors

We spend so much time talk­ing about dif­fer­ent flow­ers in flo­ral design, that we for­get the pletho­ra of green­ery and filler flow­ers that make up the some­times very strong sup­port­ing cast in our designs. This is the first in a series of arti­cles we’ll do that focus­es on the ever impor­tant green­ery.

Flower Design Trends

Flower Duet knows that the cur­rent trend in flo­ral design today to show mass­es of flow­ers with very lit­tle, if any, green­ery. This means that you have to spend more mon­ey on flow­ers to make a large design. If you use a lit­tle green­ery strate­gi­cal­ly, you can still have a very mod­ern design, but also save a few bucks. So, this arti­cle fea­ture will show you some of our favorite types of green­ery
and how to work with each one.

Green­ery Type: Ital­ian Rus­cus

Expense Fac­tor: $8–12 per bunch whole­sale

Vase Life: 6–20 days — Har­vest­ed Rus­cus stored at 40 degrees has been known to last up to five months!

Ital­ian Rus­cus is a small leafed, dark green green­ery that we favor for wed­ding designs. Like most green­ery grown for the flo­ral trade, each long stem has many small stems of leaves.

As a whole stem, Rus­cus works well in long cen­ter­piece designs (think oval shapes). It also looks great in tall vase designs and on flo­ral sprays.
Rus­cus is a great accent for bou­ton­nieres and cor­sages. This is our go-to green­ery for these types of small detail work. The foliage is a glossy green that does­n’t clash with any type of flower. It lasts a long time out of water, too. To make this stretch, sep­a­rate the lit­tle stems from the long stem as pic­tured.

Any left­over leaves can be stripped from the stems and made into lit­tle beds for a place­card table or to go around a wed­ding cake. They also make nice nests for pre­sent­ing the grooms bou­ton­niere if you want to give that spe­cial touch.

NOTE: There is anoth­er type of rus­cus called Israeli Rus­cus. It has much larg­er leaves, but shares many oth­er sim­i­lar bonus fea­tures as the Ital­ian Rus­cus.

Book Reviews

New this year, Found­ing Gar­den­ers cov­ers the gar­den phi­los­o­phy of George Wash­ing­ton, Thomas Jef­fer­son, James Madi­son and John Adams. Learn about why Wash­ing­ton want­ed only Vir­ginia native plants at Mount Ver­non and how Jef­fer­son want­ed to grow his own grapes to make the first Vir­gina wine. Find out why James Madi­son, the author of the Bill of Rights, is Amer­i­ca’s for­got­ten enivron­men­tal­ist. You’ll learn all about the flo­ra that was grown by our colo­nial ances­tors and how they felt about this “new” land.

Pub­lished by the Colo­nial Williams­burg Foun­da­tion, Flow­ers and Herbs of Ear­ly Amer­i­ca doc­u­ments in beau­ti­ful detail with pho­tographs, peri­od hand-col­ored engrav­ing, water­col­or, or wood­cuts the great vari­ety of flow­ers and herbs grown in Amer­i­ca’s colo­nial and ear­ly Fed­er­al gar­dens. Grif­fith, an his­toric plant expert, brings our botan­i­cal her­itage to the page for a mod­ern read­er to enjoy. You can learn what was grown so you can recre­ate it in your own gar­den.

Floral Tool — Digital Camera

Once you’ve cre­at­ed your masterpiece flower design, it’s time to doc­u­ment your work with a few pho­tos. This mon­th’s flo­ral tool is a dig­i­tal cam­era. Here are some tips to get the best pho­to you can of your flo­ral arrange­ments.

How to take Great Pho­tos of Your Flower Designs

TIP 1: Get a dig­i­tal SLR (sin­gle lens reflex) cam­era with a zoom lens. Try to get a cam­era that has a “flower” set­ting and a “no flash” set­ting as well as man­u­al set­tings where you can set your own aper­ture and shut­ter speed. I use a Nikon D90, because I want­ed the HD video capa­bil­i­ty, but you can go with some­thing a lit­tle less expen­sive. Check out the reviews on CNET.com to com­pare dif­fer­ent cam­eras. If you just use a point and shoot dig­i­tal cam­era, you won’t be able to always con­trol the mood and depth of field.

TIP 2: Try to shoot in nat­ur­al light with­out a flash. When you use a flash, it often dis­torts the col­or of flow­ers, espe­cial­ly if they are orange, dark pink or red.

TIP 3: Pick a neu­tral back­ground that is not busy. I like to use a smooth stuc­co wall in my back­yard for many of my shots. A blank white, cream, light gray or light green wall in a bright­ly day lit room works well, too.

TIP 4: Try to shoot from dif­fer­ent angles. Some designs look good from high above, some from straight one and some from down below.

TIP 5: Review and Zoom: Review each shot on the back of the cam­era after you shoot. Zoom in to make sure the pho­to is in sharp focus close up.

TIP 6: Review and Recom­pose: Review each shot on the back of the cam­era to make sure your arrange­ment actu­al­ly looks good in the pho­to. It can be quite shock­ing to look at your arrange­ment on the cam­era and then all of the sud­den, you see a big hole in your design!!!

TIP 7: Shoot some close-ups of just a few fea­tured flow­ers. Close up shots of parts of your design are fun to have. Use the “flower” set­ting on the cam­era, but turn off the flash if you can. This cre­ates a short depth of field, mean­ing that just some of the flow­ers will be in sharp focus and the rest of the design will be a lit­tle out of focus. This makes for a nice and roman­tic look­ing shot.

TIP 8: Shoot a lot of pho­tos, you can delete them lat­er.

TIP 9: Always do a lit­tle pho­to­shop to the images you want to add to your final port­fo­lio or to the images you are going to print. You might need to increase the expo­sure on some or use the repair tool to mask a bruised petal. I like to use iPho­to for my retouch­ing, but Pho­to­shop Ele­ments is a good choice if you have a PC. It’s impor­tant with dig­i­tal images to fix the col­or some­times. It can look “cold” so it’s good to warm up the pho­to with a more nat­ur­al hue. Take the time to learn a lit­tle about pho­to retouch­ing by either check­ing out a book from the library or doing some tuto­ri­als online.

TIP 10: Keep shoot­ing! The more you shoot, the bet­ter you’ll get at flo­ral design and pho­tog­ra­phy!

Wedding Flowers

Flower Duet offers a gen­er­ous wed­ding pack­age includ­ing a trip to the LA Flower Mart and a mock­up design of the wed­ding vision. Check out the details on our Wed­ding Flow­ers page. If you are com­ing to the Los Ange­les area for your wed­ding, we are your Los Ange­les wed­ding des­ti­na­tion florist!